Moi—August 21, 2024
Absolute powerhouse for this price point! Perfect for weekend warrior road trips and car camping. I can run my 12 volt fridge, camp lights, keep my phone and tablet charged and not run out of power. I do use a 100 wt solar panel to keep it topped off while camping. I have tested it at home as well. It will run my old school magic bullet blender, dash egg maker, my hair dryer on low, and an electric throw blanket! Peace of mind in case of temporary power outages. I've seen many YouTubers really push this to its limits and I was amazed how much it can handle with the power lifting mode on. It's not too heavy, bulky, or cheap feeling and I love that the handle is side angeled so I can have my tablet and phone on top. Nothing but good to say. Thanks Bluetti! Read more
notsoNEWKINDLEUSER—November 11, 2025
Overall it’s BLUETTI that I have settled on. Why? Functions well, and after a thorough explanation of why watts used and watts shown are different, I’m comfortable with the explanation. They do provide what is expected, and does seem to be very well made with a decent full color display you can see across the room. Lots of options in app. Just purchased another BLUETTI, slightly larger one for another application around the house. At this price point and with the protection they provide it’s essential for an older person like myself. If lights out in middle of night can simply turn lights on that are connected to these units and have a unit that keeps my fios service and network router up and running for hours. These are ups units albeit not for network equipment per ratings but works well for that purpose in my situation. And keeps lights, fans, Cpap, fridge, etc running. In other words they aren’t just for camping anymore. Just get a properly rated unit and enough backup to keep your stuff running for whatever period of time you want. Read more
Tommy Jordan—December 25, 2024
I absolutely love using this power station. I think the absolute most awesome feature I've loved so far is the LCD readout on how much wattageit's putting out. That's REALLY convenient to know how much it's drawing from the truck and how much it's putting out to my Starlink Gen3. Drawing from the truck it will pull about 91 watts max from the battery. It also has a battery shutoff so if the input source drops below a certain voltage (I think it's about 11.6) it stops drawing so it won't over-drain the battery. I've paired this with a home-grown battery pack of my own design, my starlink, my 2006 Chevy and solar panels. Chained together I can charge the green pack, plus the Bluetti pack PLUS the truck without over charging anything ( my green jump box has a solar regulator I built into it). The cell phone super USB charger will charge a device QUICK! You can turn DC on or off, turn AC on or off, and operate each independently without having to plug anything. Overall, I'm very impressed and I've recommended this to quite a few people! Read more
Kevin N Lawrence—October 21, 2025
My Bluetti has been amazing. I can run my CPAP for 3 or 4 days on one charge. It charges quickly, works well with solar, is quiet, and doesn't have that same burnt odor my Yeti Goal Zero had. I would happily buy again. Read more
Billy Bob Jo—July 28, 2025
I live in hurricane prone South Florida, and have gone weeks without power. Trying to sleep in hot humid weather is not fun. I didn't want a large noisy gas generator that requires me to store gas that can go bad. So I bought this so I can run a fan and small transistor radio all night. I need the radio for a distraction of my overactive brain. It doesn't provide the ultimate sleeping comfort, but if you've ever slept with nothing... it's a huge improvement and a compromise I was willing to make, for a reasonable cost. I normally don't sleep more than 6 hrs. I've tested it so I know this will allow me to do that for 2 nights on a full charge. There are fans that use less than 40 watts. It also allows me to charge my cell phone. I can charge it in a few hours with the solar panels I bought. It also comes with a cable that will allow me charge it with my car, for those cloudy days. I'm very happy with this purchase. Read more
Artful Dodger—October 13, 2025
Powers a few different devices and is great for camping. Has to be plugged in (or use the solar panel to recharge) after about 10-12 hours. I wish it had a built in storage drawer for the various recharge plugs, I’m convinced I will eventually lose them or misplace since we can’t keep all together Read more
keith Kirkland—October 25, 2024
This set up has been amazing. I originally picked this up because, like any good zombie apocalypse preparer, I wanted to make sure that if *hit hit the fan I still have power. I did a search and most of the batteries look like construction equipment. Not something I want it sitting in my home. At 14 pounds, it’s pretty portable, it was 700 W output, you can run my electric tea kettle. The addition of the solar panels though change of the game. I get about a 30 to 50% charge every day. I also have electricity that’s rated super expensive between 4 and 8 PM. I charge it all day with the sun, and then use free electricity when my electricity was expensive. Of course, I’m not considering major appliances like air-conditioning and electric ovens. But I simply didn’t use those during that window anyway. I was able to reduce my bill from $110 per month to about $50. It also serves as a portable station that I can throw in my car and when I’m beaching or camping I have power for the whole crew. Yesterday the power went out in my house. It was during the expensive time so I was using energy from my battery, I only found out that we had a power outage when I got a text message. That was a great feeling. The other way to use it is you can charge it overnight when electricity is super cheap. It will charge fully in just 40 minutes on turbo setting. And then you can use that cheaper electricity during the day. It also charges with your car battery lighter port, if you want to take it and charge it on the go. All in all, it was a great purchase. I’ll probably pick up a much larger one in a few years that can handle more of the house in case of a real emergency. But for portability this is the way to go. Read more